- Greater rumination and co-rumination were associated with lower across-wave latent trait cortisol (LTC).
- These associations were observed primarily in participants without a lifetime history of diagnosable depression.
- Results suggest intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation may shape first onset depression risk via HPA axis alterations captured by morning LTC.
Cogn Emot. 2026 Jun 9:1-10. doi: 10.1080/02699931.2026.2685738. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Although research has linked rumination to various hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis indicators, few studies have examined whether rumination – and its interpersonal counterpart, co-rumination – is uniquely associated with trait-like individual differences in HPA axis activity. The present study tested whether rumination and co-rumination were related to latent trait cortisol (LTC), a trait-like marker of individual differences in HPA axis activity, and whether these associations were moderated by current and lifetime histories of depressive symptoms. Undergraduates (N = 85; M age = 19.37 years) provided salivary cortisol samples four times daily (waking, 30 and 45 min post-waking, bedtime) over three 3-day sampling waves separated by 6 weeks. Rumination and co-rumination were assessed via self-report, and current and lifetime history of depressive symptoms via semi-structured interviews. An across-wave LTC was derived using the first two morning samples from nine collection days. Greater rumination and co-rumination were associated with lower across-wave LTC among individuals without a history of diagnosable depression. These results suggest that intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation strategies are associated with individual differences in HPA axis activity primarily among those without a depressive history. This work provides novel insight into a potential physiological pathway through which rumination and co-rumination may shape the risk for the first onsets of depression.
PMID:42263155 | DOI:10.1080/02699931.2026.2685738
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